They want Israel's apartheid wall demolished. They want the right to live free on their own land in their own country.

They want world community support. They want Israel held accountable for high crimes of war and against humanity. They want long denied justice.

Ta'Ayush is an Arab Jewish partnership. It seeks togetherness "to end the Israeli occupation and to achieve full civil equality through daily non-violent direct-action."

Ta'ayush is Arabic. It means living together. It's a grassroots movement. It was founded in fall 2000. Activist Arabs and Jews work cooperatively.

They're "surrounded by walls and barbed wire: the walls of segregation, racism, and discrimination between Jews and Arabs within Israel; the walls of Apartheid, closure and siege encircling the Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip; and the wall of war surrounding all inhabitants of Israel, so long as Israel remains an armed fortress in the heart of the Middle East," says Ta'ayush.

Its members work actively against racism and segregation. They're building "a true Arab-Jewish partnership."

They "strive for a future of equality, justice and peace."

They do so "through concrete, daily, non-violent actions of solidarity to end the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories and to achieve full civil equality for all."

The lives and well-being of millions of occupied Palestinians have been "subordinated to Israeli interests for more than 40 years."

Ta'ayush members came to protect Palestinian farmers. They've been doing it for 13 years. They accompany "dozens of (West Bank) Palestinian shepherds and farmers...every Saturday…"

They do it to protect them from extremist settlers. They attack Palestinian farmers in their fields. They destroy their crops.

They commit other forms of vandalism. They commit violence. They do so with virtual immunity. Israeli security forces do nothing to stop them.

On Saturday, soldiers "separated the cars of Ta'ayush members from the rest of the Israeli cars entering the West Bank through the checkpoint on the Tunnel Road (Route 60) and the Betar checkpoint," said Hass.

When they reached it south of Jerusalem, Border Police stopped them. They "showed them a military order."

It was "signed by the commandeer of the Etzion Regional Brigade, Col, Amit Yamin, restricting their movements."

Soldiers told Ta'ayush activists they were waiting for another military order to arrive. They ordered them to remain at Betar checkpoint until it did.

When it failed to come, activists "passed through the checkpoint on foot. Soldiers and police officers pursued them."

Some Ta'ayush members reached south Hebron Hills. They were shown documents declaring Palestinian land closed military zones.

Judea Brigade commander Col. Avi Balut signed them. His order read: "No person shall pass through the checkpoint except with permission given by me or a person authorized by me."

"The IDF is responsible for maintaining law and order in Judea and Samaria."

"Every week there are provocative gatherings in the area of Sussia and Mitzpe Yair, which have at times led to violent confrontations between residents of the area and even with the security forces."

"In accordance with the assessment and security considerations, it was decided not to allow free passage to all the buses, which, according to the assessment, were carrying people who were liable to disrupt public order, and to examine their entrance individually at a number of checkpoints in the southern area of Judea and Samaria."

Palestinians are barred from their own land. Activists trying to help them are blocked. Other times they're attacked.

Often they're injured, arrested, and detained. State terror is official Israeli policy. So is institutionalized racism.

International law protects refugees and asylum seekers. Article I of the 1951 UN Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees calls them:

"Person(s) who owning to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of their nationality, and is unable to or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail him/herself of the protection of that country."

Post-WW II, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) was established to help them.

To gain legal protection, they must:

• be outside their country of origin;

• fear persecution;

• be harmed or fear harm by their government or others;

• fear persecution for at least one of the above cited reasons; and

• pose no danger to others.

Israel's 1950 Law of Return grants all Jews worldwide the right to emigrate to Israel. Non-Jews aren't wanted. No refugee law exists.

Israel rejects non-Jewish refugees. It scorns them. It persecutes those arriving. Their fundamental rights are denied.

They're summarily detained. They held for extended periods. It's under extremely harsh conditions.

International law legally and morally obligates Israel to treat refugees humanely. Official state policy brutalizes them.

Israel's Infiltration Law is draconian. It calls non-Jewish migrants and asylum seekers criminals. They face harsh detention without trials or deportation.

Anyone caught helping them is liable. They face up to 15 years imprisonment. They do so for being good samaritans.

The Association for Civil Rights in Israel calls its Infiltration Law brazenly undemocratic and shameful. It's "draconian and immoral." Its "entire purpose is to deter refugees from entering Israel."

It "blatantly disregards Israel's most basic commitments as a member of the community of nations and as a signatory to the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees."

"The State of Israel has the right to protect its borders, but not by trampling human rights and ignoring democratic values."